Northcote High School
Northcote High School is a co-educational, state secondary school in Northcote, Victoria, Australia. It is situated at the southern end of the City of Darebin, on St Georges Road.
The school teaches from Years 7 to 12 and has a current population of 1,793 students. Northcote High has a large music and science program, and has been recognised as a significant leader in the use of learning technologies in the classroom.
History
Northcote High School was established in 1926 as a co-educational secondary school, one of the first six to be established in Melbourne by the Government of Victoria. The school owes its establishment largely to agitation led by John Cain, Northcote City Councillor and later Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for Jika Jika, with support from the headmasters of nearby Northcote Primary School and Wales Street Primary School. Cain's repeated efforts to establish a school to provide secondary education for the then predominantly working class suburb of Northcote were finally successful, despite an environment of opposition from conservative politicians and independent principals.Although Northcote High School was established as a co-educational school, it became a boys' school after 1928 when Preston Girls High School was established. Martin Hansen, the then Chief Inspector of Secondary Education, was convinced high schools should be segregated by gender after a tour of schools in the US and UK. In the 1980s Northcote High School again began to enrol girls in response to community pressure, officially moving to co-education in 1989. In 2018 there were approximately 982 boys and 811 girls enrolled.
Northcote High School first offered a limited Maths and Science Matriculation in 1946. Principal Alex Sutherland expanded Matriculation in the 1950s to include most subjects on the curriculum. The school continues this tradition today with a very broad range of Victorian Certificate of Education subjects on offer, including a relatively wide range of humanities subjects.
Northcote High School celebrated its 90th anniversary in 2016.
Principals
The following individuals have served as principal of Northcote High School:| Ordinal | Officeholder | Term began | Term ended | Time in office | Notes |
| 1 | J. S. Kitson | 1926 | 1927 | years | |
| 2 | F. W. Johnson | 1927 | 1941 | years | |
| 3 | W. J. Bishop | 1942 | 1946 | years | |
| 4 | L. B. Garson | 1947 | 1948 | years | |
| 5 | H. J. Moody | 1949 | 1951 | years | |
| 6 | A. Sutherland | 1952 | 1959 | years | |
| 7 | J. D. McGregor | 1960 | 1969 | years | |
| 8 | A. D. Perry | 1969 | 1969 | year | |
| 9 | S. A. Seabrook | 1970 | 1974 | years | |
| 10 | K. Yon | 1975 | 1980 | years | |
| 11 | E. R. Nelson | 1980 | 1985 | years | |
| 12 | G. L. Israel | 1985 | 2004 | years | |
| 13 | Gail Davidson | 2004 | 2009 | years | |
| 14 | Kate Morris | 2009 | 2017 | years | |
| 15 | Susan Harrap | 2018 | 2021 | years | |
| 16 | Chris Jones | 2022 | incumbent | years |
International links
Northcote High School has a long tradition of developing ties with schools overseas. In the 1930s students at Northcote High School corresponded with a school in Poland, and in the early 1950s the school began the practice of enrolling and hosting students from overseas, partly under the auspices of the Colombo plan. In 1999, a sister school agreement was made with Huaibei Number One High School in Anhui province, China and a second with Tienjin – Binhai Foreign Languages School in 2016. Regular exchanges are conducted with these schools. There is also a reciprocal exchange agreement with a school in France.In 2015 Northcote High School had one of the state's largest International student programs with more than 80 students from all five continents studying in the post-compulsory Years 10–12. In 2017, the school became the first government school to deliver the VCE offshore, in partnership with Chinese schools. In 2018, the school was awarded the Department of Education's first award for Excellence in Global Learning.
Notable alumni
- Richard Abikhair, former Australian rules footballer for and
- John Cain, former Labor Party|Labor] MLA, Victorian State Premier
- James Ford Cairns, former Labor MHR, Federal Minister and Deputy Prime Minister
- Don Chipp, former Liberal MHR, Federal Minister, and Founder Australian Democrats
- Kristen Condon, actress
- Professor Bruce Dawe, poet and writer. Winner of the Patrick White Literary Award
- Wayne Duncan, bass player in Australian 1970s rock band Daddy Cool
- Ken Emselle, Australian rules footballer for
- Noel Ferrier, entertainer
- Jaimee Fourlis, tennis player
- Don Furness, Australian rules footballer for
- John Gill, former Australian rules footballer for
- John Greening, former Australian rules footballer for
- Jack Hamilton, VFL Commissioner and former Collingwood footballer
- Vernon Hauser, former Liberal MLC
- Ashley Henderson, bass player in Australian funk band Stylus
- Professor Ken Inglis, historian
- Trevor Kaine, former Liberal ACT Chief Minister
- Geoff Leek, former Australian rules footballer for
- Colin Lovitt, barrister
- James Mollison, Director National Gallery of Australia, Director National Gallery of Victoria
- Jac Nasser, Chairman of BHP, former CEO Ford
- Ruby Roseman-Gannon Australian professional cyclist
- Normie Rowe, entertainer
- John Tasioulas, Philosopher and legal scholar, Director of the Institute for Ethics in AI University of Oxford, first Greek-Australian Rhodes Scholar
- Professor Dick Telford, Australia Sports Medicine
- Ron Todd, former Australian rules footballer for
- Graeme Weideman, former Liberal MLA, State Minister
- Garry Wilson, former Australian rules footballer for
- Ned Long, AFL Footballer
- Nell Morris-Dalton, AFLW Footballer
- Rylie Wilcox, AFLW Footballer